نتایج جستجو برای: host plants

تعداد نتایج: 400897  

2013
Zuqing Hu Huiyan Zhao Thomas Thieme

Virus-infected host plants can have positive, neutral or negative effects on vector aphids. Even though the proportion of non-vector aphids associated with a plant far exceeds that of vector species, little is known about the effect of virus-infected plants on non-vector aphids. In the present study, the English grain aphid Sitobion avenae (Fabricius) (Hemiptera: Aphididae), a non-vector of Whe...

Journal: :Journal of economic entomology 2005
Yiqun Weng Gerald J Michels Mark D Lazar Jackie C Rudd

Interactions between biotype E greenbugs, Schizaphis graminum (Rodani), and two near isogenic lines of the greenbug resistance gene Gb3 of wheat, Triticum aestivum L., were examined for 62 d after infestation. By comparing aphid performance and host responses on control and greenbug-preconditioned plants, we demonstrated that systemic resistance to greenbug herbivory was inducible in the resist...

ژورنال: علوم آب و خاک 2007
محمد رضا سبزعلیان, , آقافخر میرلوحی, , محمد حسین اهتمام, ,

In order to evaluate endophyte effect on plant earliness, compatible host-endophyte combinations including four genotypes of tall fescue and two genotypes of meadow fescue were selected and used in this study. One tiller-part of each genotype was treated using a fungicide mixture of Propiconazole and Folicur. New tillers of endophyte-infected and endophyte-free plants were planted in the field ...

2015
A. C. Riach M. V. L. Perera H. V. Florance S. D. Penfield J. K. Hill

Studying the biochemical responses of different plant species to insect herbivory may help improve our understanding of the evolution of defensive metabolites found in host plants and their role in plant-herbivore interactions. Untargeted metabolic fingerprints measured as individual mass features were used to compare metabolite reactions in three Brassicales host-plant species (Cleome spinosa,...

2000
DOUGLAS J. FUTUYMA

‘Coevolution’ between plants and herbivorous arthropods has several meanings: cospeciation, reciprocal adaptation, and a history of ‘escape-and-radiation’. Few well documented examples of each are known. Most evolutionary research on insect-plant interactions concerns the adaptations of insects to plants or of plants to insects, but little of it expressly addresses reciprocal adaptation. Modern...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1987
M C Press J M Tuohy G R Stewart

Gas exchange characteristics are reported for both members of the sorghum-Striga host-parasite association. Both Striga hermonthica (Del.) Benth and Striga asiatica (L.) Kuntze had transpiration rates considerably in excess of those of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench, cv CSH1). Stomatal conductance in both Striga spp. showed little response to periods of darkness and moderate water stress....

Journal: :Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2007
M J McLeish B J Crespi T W Chapman M P Schwarz

The diversification of gall-inducing Australian Kladothrips (Insecta: Thysanoptera) on Acacia has produced a pair of sister-clades, each of which includes a suite of lineages that utilize virtually the same set of 15 closely related host plant species. This pattern of parallel insect-host plant radiation may be driven by cospeciation, host-shifting to the same set of host plants, or some combin...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2008
Rusty Rodriguez Regina Redman

All plants in natural ecosystems are thought to be symbiotic with mycorrhizal and/or endophytic fungi. Collectively, these fungi express different symbiotic lifestyles ranging from parasitism to mutualism. Analysis of Colletotrichum species indicates that individual isolates can express either parasitic or mutualistic lifestyles depending on the host genotype colonized. The endophyte colonizati...

2016
Andrea L. Joyce Miguel Sermeno Chicas Leopoldo Serrano Cervantes Miguel Paniagua Sonja J. Scheffer M. Alma Solis

Diatraea lineolata and Diatraea saccharalis (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) are moths with stemboring larvae that feed and develop on economically important grasses. This study investigated whether these moths have diverged from a native host plant, corn, onto introduced crop plants including sorghum, sugarcane, and rice. Diatraea larvae were collected from these four host plants throughout the year i...

Journal: :Ecology 2009
Julia Koricheva Alan C Gange Tara Jones

Mycorrhizal status of the host plant is often ignored in studies on plant-herbivore interactions, but mycorrhizal colonization is known to induce many morphological, physiological, and biochemical changes in host plants, which in turn may alter plant quality as a host for insect herbivores. Both positive and negative effects of mycorrhizal colonization of the host plant on performance and densi...

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